Transcriptome-wide investigation of circular RNAs in rice

Tingting Lu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lingling Cui(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yan Zhou(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chuanrang Zhu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Danlin Fan(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hao Gong(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qiang Zhao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Congcong Zhou(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yan Zhao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Danfeng Lu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jianghong Luo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yongchun Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qilin Tian(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qi Feng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Tao Huang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Bin Han(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
RNA
October 13, 2015
Cited by 434Open Access
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Abstract

Various stable circular RNAs (circRNAs) are newly identified to be the abundance of noncoding RNAs in Archaea, Caenorhabditis elegans, mice, and humans through high-throughput deep sequencing coupled with analysis of massive transcriptional data. CircRNAs play important roles in miRNA function and transcriptional controlling by acting as competing endogenous RNAs or positive regulators on their parent coding genes. However, little is known regarding circRNAs in plants. Here, we report 2354 rice circRNAs that were identified through deep sequencing and computational analysis of ssRNA-seq data. Among them, 1356 are exonic circRNAs. Some circRNAs exhibit tissue-specific expression. Rice circRNAs have a considerable number of isoforms, including alternative backsplicing and alternative splicing circularization patterns. Parental genes with multiple exons are preferentially circularized. Only 484 circRNAs have backsplices derived from known splice sites. In addition, only 92 circRNAs were found to be enriched for miniature inverted-repeat transposable elements (MITEs) in flanking sequences or to be complementary to at least 18-bp flanking intronic sequences, indicating that there are some other production mechanisms in addition to direct backsplicing in rice. Rice circRNAs have no significant enrichment for miRNA target sites. A transgenic study showed that overexpression of a circRNA construct could reduce the expression level of its parental gene in transgenic plants compared with empty-vector control plants. This suggested that circRNA and its linear form might act as a negative regulator of its parental gene. Overall, these analyses reveal the prevalence of circRNAs in rice and provide new biological insights into rice circRNAs.


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